Wednesday, March 6, 2019

Assignments for the recently promoted officers. 



9 comments:

Anonymous said...

WOW..I am speechless you have a Captain who had a formal complaint filed on him by the NFL and violated several counties policies and nothing happens to him. even better you have an LT. who had two sexual harassment complaints filed on him and you promote him to Capt and put him in the special victims unit.
when you make it to the command staff I guess you lose all common sense, I mean you already have to give up morals, and values and self-esteem.

Anonymous said...

Hey, y'all. Can we get new CID to (pretty f*cking please with cheese on top) work on this case. This should not be a tough one. This family is suffering. https://www.ajc.com/news/crime--law/need-know-parents-woman-killed-dekalb-trail-desperate-for-answers/3KcCQ55rxDOqptAQUmRhxJ/

To make this easy:

1. All personal devices belonging to the victim, including laptops cell phones and tablets need to be turned in to HQ (cyber) and they need to comb through her social media accounts and trace the last people she was speaking to. They need to find out who lured her and how. There has to be be data evidence for that to happen the way DK suspects. All the wifis her device had memorized. Etc.

2. Subpoenas must be submitted to retrieve tower records from the victim and any other cellular activity in the area. Compare this data with her incoming and outgoing data you pull from computer forensics.

Purely speculative: I have a suspicion/hunch this might have been a low key relationship and this is why you have few leads from friends and family. I'd look at friends and friends significant others. I feel this was a crime that someone committed to keep the relationship under wraps. You can back this up with the data. I could be wrong but that's the feeling I get.


This needs to get done. It looks really bad, y'all. Good luck. Congrats on the new promotions.

Anonymous said...

Do you think you just told the detectives investigative techniques they don't already know?

Anonymous said...

Yes. However, I think that sometimes a gentle respectful reminder of what needs to be done is better than barking orders at CID or reprimanding them in a public forum for not giving a damn. Yo
My aim was to give CID the benefit of the doubt instead of make Dekalb look like assholes when the press is up their ass on this case.
Dekalb has a lot of shifting going on and I get that. The victim's family does not. My list of tasks was to make this easier to expedite the investigation so that it's easier on your department and you guys can restore that "public trust thingy" I know your department cares so much about...........right??

If they "knew this stuff already" an arrest would have been made before Christmas 2018. It's March, so lets get to steppin', shall we?

Anonymous said...

To the poster whom was giving all the investigation tips: KEEP YOUR ADVISE TO YOURSELF. That's great that you saw a rerun of CSI last night but that doesn't qualify you to criticize how real detectives work their cases. I promise you there is more to this case than what you see on the news.

Anonymous said...

They don't need you telling them basic sh*t you learned from watching too much tv. If there hasn't been an arrest made it's because none of that stuff worked. Look at the Bridget Shiel case in Atlanta. Even after they tried everything you mentioned they couldn't solve the case. They didn't solve it until a year later when they got a DNA hit off a perp in prison for a murder that dekalb solved! Dekalb solved their case first and that ended up solving apd's case. All that was done without your help.

Anonymous said...

"They don't need you telling them basic sh*t you learned from watching too much tv. If there hasn't been an arrest made it's because none of that stuff worked. Look at the Bridget Shiel case in Atlanta. Even after they tried everything you mentioned they couldn't solve the case. They didn't solve it until a year later when they got a DNA hit off a perp in prison for a murder that dekalb solved! Dekalb solved their case first and that ended up solving apd's case. All that was done without your help."

That was done by planting circumstantial DNA evidence at a crime scene (in Dekalb where her CAR was left) of a guy who was already in prison who said he never met Sheil...convenient. APD trusts y'all and they wind up looking like jerks. I'm asking for that to not happen again.

I thought this little switcheroo in CID was supposed to fix that issue and put more competent people in the mix who wouldn't let that happen. I bet if you run the barcode in evidence it's not the same sprite purchased at that store seen on surveillance. And it's not the first time that Dekalb has done that circumstantial DNA thing that 'magically" appears and "solves a homicide out of their jurisdiction" where the wrong guy might go to jail.

This is why I won't go to Dekalb. That homicide would be a RICO case and the shooter isn't the real person who needs to be locked up. How could you bring up that case and think I wouldn't mention how much BS it was?

Oh, yeah. You thought I learned this on TV.
Didn't learn it from TV hoss. I learned it by paying attention to what gets done and how it gets done and by whom it gets done.

Back off.

Anonymous said...

DeKalb County is the best place to be murdered. More than likely your case will be solved. Best murder police anywhere.

Anonymous said...

Shiel was murdered in May 2016. Male DNA samples that matched each other were found on her and on the Sprite bottle by her car. The samples were submitted to codis in May 2016 and there was no known matches in the system.

In October 2016, Spencer committed a double murder in DeKalb. He was sent to prison in 2018 and gave a DNA sample, like all prisoners do. When he did, it matched the samples APD submitted back in May 2016.

Explain to us, genius, how APD had Spencer's DNA to plant on Shiel and the Sprite bottle in May 2016 when he hadn't committed the DeKalb murders yet and hadn't gone to prison yet and hadn't given a DNA sample yet? His DNA was unidentified in codis for two years until the prison system sent Spencer's DNA to codis and it matched the two year old samples from APD!

Go back to your TV shows, leave the investigating to the professionals.